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Spoilers Picard 1x1, "Remembrance"

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Pretty damn great.

I think my only issue was how quick Picard believed Dahj, however I can forgive that because otherwise it would take 5-10 minutes for something we all know would happen. It wouldn't do anything to serve the plot and all it would do is extend the run time and shorten viewers patience.

I thought he figured it out all a little too quickly. But this is Jean-Luc Picard. And besides, he obviously feels the loss of Data so acutely it's a story he'd want to believe. I wonder if the actual explanation is more complex.
 
Sounded like it. Which is fine, because plenty of Romulans have had American accents.
I would just have all actors use their normal voices when playing aliens. All Earth accents are equally "wrong" for the aliens unless they grew up among humans. If anyone asks, just say that it's due to the universal translator. It doesnt render some hypothetical accent-less speech. It assigns known and familiar accented pronunciations to the translations.
 
BTW in the intro poker game with Picard scene Data was holding five Queen of Hearts cards. Does this imply that there are five Dahj-type androids out there - two are known and three to be discovered later? I guess we'll soon find out...
Well, if we go with the assumption Picard's dreams are foreshadowing plot points, I would take the five Queens at face value as a reference to the Borg Queen. We know the Romulans are running a "Reclamation Site" for liberated drones, which appears to be a cover for experimentation. We've also seen the bald Romulan in the SDCC trailer refer to "The End of All, the Destroyer" as "she," and a liberated Borg in the new post-episode trailer accuse someone of being "The Destroyer." I'm assuming they're both referring to Soji, so reading between the lines, I'm thinking the Romulans are building a new type of Borg and due to her unique, advanced construction, view Soji as the ideal queen.
 
What I enjoyed about this episode was the pace of the story - there was a narrative framework to outline the broad brush stroke version of the overall plot, but the details are being revealed carefully and slowly.
So much fun.
 
Where would he have ended up then?
I still say that there is no way in Hell Data would ever let anybody get their hands on Lore.
Lore caused so much death and destruction during all the times we saw him active that Data would be absolutely sure he would never be used for experiments or activated again.
Probably to the extent that Data had Lore's head disposed of, or at the very least put it where nobody could ever find it.
 
I wonder if Maddox used Borg tech to help develop his bio-androids?

Heh, bio-android.
latest
 
I'm still getting caught up on this thread, so forgive me if my comments are just old hat at this point, but I have a few observations.

Overall, it's probably Star Trek's best pilot, though that is an admittedly low bar. The producers have said they view the first three episodes as the "pilot," though, so I'll reserve final judgment. Still, with only "Caretaker" and "The Cage" even in contention, I expect it will overtake them.

That the episode began with call backs to both Nemesis, and especially "All Good Things," is both welcome, and telling. They very obviously wanted to say "we're back in the 24th century, and this is where we left off." And it works.

Stewart is in fine form, all things considered, and I love his Romulan house staff. I was seriously geeking out over Orla Brady. Such an Irish Romulan, it made me happy. I'm not so keen on Nerak at the end, he's so painfully British in (so far) all the wrong ways. And when he started walking down the corridor before we get real close, he looked like Ethan Peck as Scruffy Spock.

The first two acts, I'm completely invested in the story. From the hatchet-job of an interview to the rooftop action scene, I think it all works. Then act three is definitely weaker. It's mild, not catastrophic, but it's still significant. I would have much preferred the Daystrom scene to play out differently, without the full on info dump that we get, and maybe leave it at a lingering shot of the necklace. As it is, Dahj's death doesn't have any room to breathe. IMO, they should have pushed off introducing the twin concept -- and certainly the reveal -- by at least an episode, in order to give Picard, and us, time to process. So the third act, compared to the first two, feels both rushed and well, bland.

I wasn't expecting Maddox to be the macguffin, or even referenced at all, so that's welcome, but the whole sequence felt like telling, not showing. And now I'm thinking of Bruce Maddox as "Father of Cylons," because that's all these new skinjobs--er, I mean synths -- feel like so far. Positronic skinjob Cylons from BSG, with Dahj seriously channeling Matt Damon from the first Bourne Identity film.

That being said, I love the design of the warbirds, and all the possibilities the Reclamation Site base implies. Overall, it's an 8.5 out of 10 at least.
 
Think about what would have happened if Data was still alive when Dahj showed up. He would have finally been able to love her:wah:
 
just finished watching it there. Excellent episode. Picard is definately back. Very intriguing storyline too and it'll be interesting to see where they go from here with it. 10/10 for me.
 
I think Dahj's death was pretty gruesome and one of the worst(but good for drama) we have ever seen. Right up their with the transporter accident in TMP.

Jason
Actually I still would say the alien invader death in TNG Season 1 "Conspiracy":
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Is a bit more graphic/gruesome - but yeah the Dahj death disolve is up there too for Trek overall.
 
Actually I still would say the alien invader death in TNG Season 1 "Conspiracy":
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Is a bit more graphic/gruesome - but yeah the Dahj death disolve is up there too for Trek overall.
Also, Varia's death in "The Most Toys" (TNG s3)was pretty harsh too
 
I thought it was a fantastic first episode! Well paced and at his core Picard is the character we all remember.
 
Just rewatched the clip and it says that a star goes nova (which could destroy the galaxy, whatever that means) and Spock comes up with a plan to save Romulus. He stops it with red matter but it was too late to save the planet.
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^^^
I guess my question would be: IF the Supernova that Spock was attempting to stop WAS the Star of the Romulan Home system - how in the hell would creating a massive Black hole in the vicinity of said star save Romulus. Not only would there be no star inn the system to continue to provide what the planet would need to remain habitable; there would be a massive black hole in it's place that I assume would eventually consume the planet regardless.

So yeah, the whole setup/explanation doesn't make sense unless the Super Nova was a different star; and SOMEHOW that Super Nova created some type of FTL/Subspace effect that Romulan/Federation scientists found would trigger other Stars (including the Romulan Home System star) in a few months/years/whatever; and that somehow, using Red Matter to create a Black Hole somewhere near (but still a 'safe' distance from the Romulan system) would stop that effect from occurring.
 
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